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jueves, 17 de septiembre de 2015

HAVING A DREAM 2 NEPAL: FROM CHINA TO BANGLADESH

A series of thoughts, images, and sensations occurring in a person's mind during sleep.People contemplate the possibility of doing something or that something might be the case.

I dreamed of amapand an arrow, something like that

Andthe arrow came out ofNepal, crossedIndia,andBangladeshreached

like this

....long time ago. Why?

Nepal is a developing country with a low income economy, ranking 145th of 187 countries on the Human Development Index (HDI) in 2014. It continues to struggle with high levels of hunger and poverty.

Nepal was ruled by the Shah dynasty of kings from 1768—when Prithvi Narayan Shah unified its many small kingdoms—until 2008. A decade-long Civil War involving the Communist Party of Nepal, followed by weeks of mass protests by all major political parties, led to the 12-point agreement of 22 November 2005. The ensuing elections for the 1st Nepalese Constituent Assembly on 28 May 2008 overwhelmingly favored the abolition of the monarchy and the establishment of a federal multiparty representative democratic republic ....and fiasco. The 2nd Nepalese Constituent Assembly elected in 2013 is another effort to create a new constitution but...

After therecent earthquakeand the current legislativechaos, Nepalis a disaster,this countrycannot be an enemy.....it is a path.

Nepal has close ties with both of its neighbors, India and China. In accordance with a long-standing treaty, Indian and Nepalese citizens may travel to each other's countries without a passport or visa. Nepalese citizens may work in India without legal restriction. The Indian Army maintains seven Gorkha regiments consisting of Gorkha troops recruited mostly from Nepal.

However, since the Government of Nepal has been dominated by socialists, and India's government has been controlled by more right-wing parties, India has been remilitarizing the "porous" Indo-Nepali border to stifle the flow of Islamist groups.

And Nepal has assisted in curbing anti-China protests from the Tibetan diaspora.Indian Chinese territorialclaims

Source: http://www.economist.com/blogs/banyan/2014/04/india-and-china

The two sides are working to demarcate the de facto border—more than 3,000km long. China has never recognised the “McMahon Line” that India inherited as the frontier in the eastern sector from a treaty signed between a Scot representing the British raj and an independent Tibet. China overran Indian forces in some places. But, having made its point, it abruptly declared a ceasefire and withdrew, restoring the pre-war status quo. The two countries agreed to get on with improving relations in other spheres.

The Indian Chinese brotherhood has already been tested by the uprising in Tibet in 1959, and the hospitality India afforded the Dalai Lama and 80,000 other Tibetans who fled into exile. Also, India had noticed that two years earlier China had built a road across the Aksai Chin, an area India claimed as part of its Ladakh region of Kashmir. Keeping control of that strategically important road, linking its frontier regions of Tibet and Xinjiang, has always seemed one of China’s main war aims.

Since then it has been threatened at times by skirmishes or incursions, most recently in April 2013, when Chinese troops intruded well into Indian-held Ladakh.